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8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
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Florida Public High School Graduation Rates, 2009-10
Series 2011-10D November 2010
Floridas Change to Reporting the NGA Compact Graduation Rate
In September 2009, the Florida State Board of Education (SBE) approved the states new high school grading formulawhich incorporates graduation rates into the grading of high schools. The graduation rate the SBE chose to use in the newgrading formula is the states National Governors Association (NGA) Compact rate, which includes standard and speciadiplomas but excludes GEDs, both regular and adult. Florida is using this rate in place of its regular rate because the U.SDepartment of Education (USED) is moving all states to adopt a uniform calculation method by 2010-11, that includes
standard diplomas but excludes GEDs and special diplomas. Using the NGA rate now helps to transition Florida to thenew federal rate when it becomes effective.
Floridas NGA high school graduation rate has consistently increased during the past five years, fluctuating from 68.9percent in 2005-06 to 79.0 percent in 2009-10.
Figure 1: Four-Year NGA Graduation Rate, 2005-06 through 2009-10
79.0%
76.3%
73.1%
70.3%
68.9%
50.0%
55.0%
60.0%
65.0%
70.0%
75.0%
80.0%
85.0%
2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
Florida calculates a cohort graduation rate. A cohort is defined as a group of students on the same schedule to graduate
The graduation rate measures the percentage of students who graduate within four years of their first enrollment in ninthgrade. Subsequent to their enrollment in ninth grade, exiting transfers and deceased students are removed from thecalculation. Entering transfer students are included in the count of the class with which they are scheduled to graduate,based on their date of enrollment. NGA graduation rates have been reported in the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) SchooPublic Accountability Reports (SPARs) since 2005-06 and are provided on-line at http://doewebprd.doe.state.fl.us/eds/nclbspar/index.cfm. District level graduation rates are provided in tables 6 through 12.
If you have questions regarding the content of this publication, please contact the Florida Department of Education, Officeof Education Information and Accountability Services at (850) 245-0400, or send e-mail to [email protected].
Florida Department of EducationEric J. Smith, Commissioner
http://doeweb-prd.doe.state.fl.us/eds/nclbspar/index.cfmhttp://doeweb-prd.doe.state.fl.us/eds/nclbspar/index.cfmmailto:[email protected]://doeweb-prd.doe.state.fl.us/eds/nclbspar/index.cfmhttp://doeweb-prd.doe.state.fl.us/eds/nclbspar/index.cfmmailto:[email protected]8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
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Types of Graduation Rates Calculated in Florida
Florida currently calculates three graduation rates: the NGA rate, detailed above, was mandated by the Florida Legislaturein 2006 to meet an agreement with the National Governors Association Compact and was first implemented using thedata for 2004-05 and reported in the 2005-06 NCLB SPARs; a rate for No Child Left Behind (NCLB) reporting purposesimplemented in 2001; and Floridas regular rate, which has been calculated consistently since 1998-99.
All three versions use the cohort method of tracking individual students in and out of the system from their entrance into
the ninth grade through completion four years later. However, each rate defines a graduate differently. The differencesbetween the NGA rate, the NCLB rate, and Floridas regular graduation rate are as follows:
The NGA graduation rate counts as graduates recipients of standard and special diplomas but not GEDs.
The NCLB graduation rate counts as graduates recipients of standard diplomas and GEDs awarded tohigh school students but not special diplomas and GEDs awarded to adult students.
Floridas regular rate counts all diploma recipients as graduates. This includes standard and specialdiplomas and all GEDs.
The chart below shows an increase for all three versions of the graduation rate from 2005-06 to 2009-10.
Figure 2: Florida's Three Graduation Rates, 2005-06 through 2009-10
60.0
65.0
70.0
75.0
80.0
85.0
Cohort Year
Percentage
NGA Rate 68.9 70.3 73.1 76.3 79.0
NCLB Rate 68.3 69.8 72.8 76.2 78.2
Florida Rate 71.0 72.4 75.4 78.6 80.7
2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
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Graduation Rates by Race:
Table 1: NGA Graduation Rates by Race, 2005-06 through 2009-10
White, Non-Hispanic
Black, Non-Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/PacificIslander
American
Indian/Alaskan Native Multiracial Total
2005-06 77.4% 55.3% 62.0% 82.3% 73.1% 73.0% 68.9%
2006-07 78.6% 56.9% 64.3% 82.2% 71.8% 72.3% 70.3%
2007-08 80.8% 60.8% 67.6% 83.8% 76.1% 77.3% 73.1%
2008-09 83.1% 64.9% 72.1% 87.9% 76.8% 81.3% 76.3%
2009-10 85.4% 68.4% 75.3% 89.8% 76.8% 83.7% 79.0%
Table 2: NCLB Graduation Rates by Race, 2005-06 through 2009-10
White, Non-Hispanic
Black, Non-Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/PacificIslander
American
Indian/Alaskan Native Multiracial Total
2005-06 77.6% 52.8% 61.2% 82.5% 73.1% 73.9% 68.3%
2006-07 78.9% 54.6% 63.6% 82.4% 72.3% 73.8% 69.8%
2007-08 81.4% 58.7% 67.1% 83.8% 76.9% 78.2% 72.8%
2008-09 83.8% 63.3% 71.6% 88.1% 77.4% 82.4% 76.2%
2009-10 85.2% 66.6% 74.6% 89.6% 77.9% 83.5% 78.2%
Table 3: Regular Graduation Rates by Race, 2005-06 through 2009-10
White, Non-
Hispanic
Black, Non-
Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/Pacific
Islander
AmericanIndian/Alaskan
Native Multiracial Total2005-06 79.9% 56.9% 63.7% 83.2% 75.7% 75.9% 71.0%
2006-07 81.0% 58.7% 66.0% 83.2% 74.7% 75.4% 72.4%
2007-08 83.6% 62.5% 69.1% 84.2% 80.3% 80.5% 75.4%
2008-09 86.0% 66.7% 73.5% 88.9% 79.7% 83.7% 78.6%
2009-10 87.4% 70.1% 76.4% 90.4% 79.9% 85.3% 80.7%
Floridas Rates versus National Graduation Rate Rankings
Many national organizations, including the USED, and other interest groups estimate graduation rates, which usuallydiffer significantly from one another. It can be quite confusing and often misleading when various organizations release
national graduation rankings, but they do not match the rate Florida released. Student database systems and datacollection methodologies vary from state to state, and national studies must rely on the lowest common denominatorsavailable across all states to make comparisons. Additionally, not all states have fully implemented a longitudinal datasystem, as Florida has. This means that national-level studies do not follow the precise methodology for calculatinggraduation rates that Florida uses, and are, therefore, merely estimates of graduating students rather than exact countsand percentages.
The USED mandated in October 2008 that all states implement a uniform, comparable graduation rate, which is cohort-based, by 2010-11. As stated earlier, Florida has calculated a cohort graduation rate since 1998-99 and is well positionedto meet this mandate. As other states transition to the cohort method and the uniform graduation rate, calculations wilbe consistent across states and more valid national comparisons can be made.
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Graduation Rates versus Dropout Rates
Further confusion occurs when comparing the graduation rates to the dropout rates. These rates are not inverses of oneanother. The differences are as follows:
The rates apply to different periods of measurement.
Graduation rate is a four-year, cohort-based indicator.
Dropout rate is a single-year indicator.
The rates apply to different populations.
Graduation rate tracks the progress of a group of students who entered the same grade at thesame time over a four-year period.
Dropout rate tracks allninth- through twelfth-grade students in a single year.
Floridas NGA graduation rate is 79.0 percent, but that doesnt mean that 21.0 percent of the cohort are dropouts. In acohort students can be classified as graduates, dropouts, and non-graduates. The non-graduates are those students whohave been retained and are still in school or students who received certificates of completion.
Dropout Rates
Floridas dropout rate is the percentage of ninth- through twelfth-grade dropouts compared to the ninth- through twelfth-
grade total, year-long student membership. A dropout is defined as a student who withdraws from school for any ofseveral reasons without transferring to another school, home education program, or adult education program. Thedefinitions for a dropout are listed below in Table 5.
The 2009-10 dropout rate for Florida has declined for the fourth year in a row. District-level dropout rates are provided inTable 13.
Table 4: Dropouts by Race, 2005-06 through 2009-10
White, Non-
Hispanic
Black, Non-
Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/Pacific
Islander
AmericanIndian/Alaskan
Native Multiracial Total
2005-06 2.6% 4.7% 4.3% 1.5% 3.1% 2.6% 3.5%
2006-07 2.4% 4.7% 3.9% 1.7% 2.6% 2.3% 3.3%
2007-08 1.9% 3.6% 3.1% 1.0% 2.1% 1.8% 2.6%
2008-09 1.6% 3.4% 2.5% 0.8% 2.3% 1.6% 2.3%
2009-10 1.4% 2.9% 2.5% 0.8% 2.2% 1.4% 2.0%
Table 5: Dropout Withdrawal Codes and Definitions
DNE - Any PK-12 student who was expected to attend a school but did not enter as expected forunknown reasons
W05 - Any student age 16 or older who leaves school voluntarily with no intention of returning
W13 - Any PK-12 student withdrawn from school due to court action
W15 - Any PK-12 student who is withdrawn from school due to nonattendance
W18 - Any PK-12 student who withdraws from school due to medical reasonsW21 - Any PK-12 student who is withdrawn from school due to being expelled
W22 - Any PK-12 student whose whereabouts is unknown
W23 Any PK-12 student who withdraws from school for any reason other than W01 - W22 orW24 W27
4
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Table 6: NGA, NCLB, and Florida Graduation Rates, by District 2009-10
District NGA NCLB Florida
0
1 Alachua 76.4% 73.2% 76.6%0
2 Baker 75.9% 74.1% 77.3%
03 Bay 81.1% 79.1% 81.9%
0
4 Bradford 63.6% 66.9% 71.1%
05 Brevard 95.3% 93.2% 95.8%
0
6 Broward 77.7% 76.6% 77.9%0
7 Calhoun 88.2% 86.8% 89.0%
08 Charlotte 79.3% 80.3% 82.4%
09 Citrus 82.9% 83.7% 85.6%1
0 Clay 78.4% 84.4% 85.9%
1
1 Collier 79.4% 76.9% 80.4%1
2
Columbi
a 87.0% 78.8% 88.5%
13 Dade 72.1% 72.0% 72.6%
1
4 DeSoto 61.0% 64.5% 69.0%1
5 Dixie 66.4% 65.8% 66.4%
1
6 Duval 66.6% 69.9% 73.1%1
7
Escambi
a 77.9% 72.4% 78.8%
18 Flagler 83.5% 80.9% 83.5%
1
9 Franklin 78.7% 72.0% 81.6%
20 Gadsden 58.1% 60.2% 63.4%
2
1 Gilchrist 92.1% 92.7% 94.9%2
2 Glades 63.6% 63.6% 66.2%
23 Gulf 95.5% 95.5% 96.2%
2 Hamilton 63.0% 60.1% 65.5%
5
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District NGA NCLB Florida4
2
5 Hardee 75.1% 72.3% 76.0%2
6 Hendry 81.4% 79.2% 81.9%
2
7
Hernand
o 79.0% 82.6% 84.9%2
8
Highland
s 73.4% 75.0% 78.1%
29
Hillsborough 82.3% 81.7% 84.4%
3
0 Holmes 80.6% 80.2% 81.9%3
1
Indian
River 82.1% 85.6% 87.2%
32 Jackson 81.5% 84.7% 87.9%
33 Jefferson 50.8% 49.2% 51.6%
34 Lafayette 88.3% 84.4% 88.3%
3
5 Lake 80.8% 79.0% 82.3%3
6 Lee 80.3% 78.0% 80.6%
37 Leon 77.6% 76.6% 80.2%
3
8 Levy 70.7% 69.7% 71.4%39 Liberty 75.3% 87.6% 91.2%
4
0 Madison 65.0% 72.2% 79.7%4
1 Manatee 76.4% 74.4% 79.2%
42 Marion 77.8% 76.4% 79.5%
4
3 Martin 89.8% 88.8% 90.4%
44 Monroe 85.4% 82.6% 86.3%
4
5 Nassau 89.5% 89.2% 91.8%4
6 Okaloosa 89.0% 89.9% 91.9%
47
Okeecho bee 64.9% 68.7% 71.7%
4
8 Orange 79.0% 77.9% 79.6%
6
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District NGA NCLB Florida4
9 Osceola 83.3% 79.5% 83.5%
50
PalmBeach 81.9% 80.2% 82.9%
5
1 Pasco 81.9% 84.2% 87.2%
52 Pinellas 77.7% 77.0% 78.8%
5
3 Polk 73.2% 71.2% 75.9%5
4 Putnam 74.6% 71.2% 82.0%
55 St. Johns 92.1% 90.5% 92.6%
5
6 St. Lucie 79.1% 77.6% 79.1%5
7
Santa
Rosa 88.3% 86.2% 88.8%5
8 Sarasota 84.3% 84.1% 86.1%5
9 Seminole 93.8% 92.6% 94.2%
60 Sumter 86.9% 84.0% 87.7%
6
1
Suwanne
e 62.7% 72.6% 74.5%6
2 Taylor 73.7% 70.0% 74.7%
63 Union 76.4% 75.8% 76.4%6
4 Volusia 81.2% 78.7% 81.9%
65 Wakulla 82.7% 81.7% 84.9%
6
6 Walton 83.2% 82.2% 85.1%6
7
Washing
ton 84.4% 82.9% 84.4%
6
8
Deaf/Bli
nd 88.8% 55.0% 88.8%6
9
Dozier/O
kee # 60.0% 60.0%
72 FAU 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
7
3 FSU 97.9% 97.9% 97.9%7
4 FAMU 94.6% 94.6% 94.6%
7 UF 96.5% 96.5% 96.5%
7
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District NGA NCLB Florida5
FLORID
A 79.0% 78.2% 80.7%*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
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Table 7: NGA Graduation Rates, 2005-06 through 2009-10*
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
01 Alachua
66.3%
65.2%
67.6%
66.5% 76.4%
0
2 Baker
68.0
%
76.3
%
74.9
%
85.3
% 75.9%0
3 Bay
75.8
%
76.8
%
76.1
%
77.1
% 81.1%
0
4 Bradford
64.4
%
68.7
%
70.3
%
72.1
% 63.6%0
5 Brevard
89.5
%
91.2
%
92.5
%
94.7
% 95.3%
06 Broward
67.8%
66.3%
69.7%
73.9% 77.7%
0
7 Calhoun
87.4
%
80.4
%
92.1
%
91.6
% 88.2%0
8 Charlotte
74.1
%
75.9
%
78.5
%
77.0
% 79.3%09 Citrus
70.0%
74.3%
75.7%
81.8% 82.9%
1
0 Clay
68.3
%
68.6
%
70.5
%
75.3
% 78.4%
11 Collier
73.3%
71.9%
74.5%
77.2% 79.4%
1
2
Columbi
a
62.8
%
67.2
%
73.0
%
82.0
% 87.0%1
3 Dade
58.7
%
63.4
%
65.4
%
68.5
% 72.1%
14 DeSoto
63.9%
62.8%
61.2%
64.7% 61.0%
1
5 Dixie
70.4
%
75.0
%
76.6
%
74.0
% 66.4%
16 Duval
57.4%
59.8%
61.3%
64.5% 66.6%
1
7
Escambi
a
73.7
%
74.0
%
74.5
%
77.0
% 77.9%1
8 Flagler
78.4
%
77.1
%
80.9
%
81.3
% 83.5%
1
9 Franklin
60.4
%
55.0
%
54.0
%
77.9
% 78.7%2
0 Gadsden
41.8
%
46.6
%
52.5
%
60.3
% 58.1%
21 Gilchrist
76.1%
84.0%
90.2%
94.7% 92.1%
2
2 Glades
57.3
%
50.6
%
35.6
%
60.0
% 63.6%2
3 Gulf
83.7
%
85.1
%
89.0
%
89.4
% 95.5%
9
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District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2
4 Hamilton
52.5
%
50.4
%
56.4
%
58.6
% 63.0%2
5 Hardee
69.7
%
72.1
%
65.6
%
71.9
% 75.1%
2
6 Hendry
70.2
%
65.0
%
72.5
%
73.5
% 81.4%2
7
Hernand
o
72.9
%
72.8
%
74.3
%
75.4
% 79.0%
28
Highlands
68.0%
69.3%
67.4%
73.3% 73.4%
2
9
Hillsboro
ugh
74.5
%
76.3
%
77.0
%
82.2
% 82.3%3
0 Holmes
68.3
%
70.6
%
77.0
%
80.3
% 80.6%
31
IndianRiver
81.0%
78.7%
80.6%
82.1% 82.1%
32 Jackson
85.5%
80.1%
83.6%
80.8% 81.5%
33 Jefferson
50.0%
58.1%
47.3%
53.8% 50.8%
3
4 Lafayette
81.7
%
77.8
%
92.0
%
79.7
% 88.3%3
5 Lake
67.5
%
69.5
%
75.0
%
77.0
% 80.8%
36 Lee
69.3%
70.6%
76.9%
77.6% 80.3%
3
7 Leon
72.5
%
72.7
%
73.5
%
74.3
% 77.6%38 Levy
63.8%
64.3%
67.3%
67.0% 70.7%
3
9 Liberty
52.9
%
57.9
%
69.2
%
74.4
% 75.3%4
0 Madison
55.8
%
59.6
%
61.5
%
73.3
% 65.0%
41 Manatee
70.9%
73.4%
73.3%
74.5% 76.4%
4
2 Marion
63.1
%
65.4
%
67.1
%
73.7
% 77.8%
43 Martin
90.7%
88.9%
90.3%
92.2% 89.8%
4
4 Monroe
71.5
%
76.5
%
78.5
%
81.5
% 85.4%4
5 Nassau
71.4
%
70.2
%
70.9
%
76.3
% 89.5%
46 Okaloosa
81.2%
80.9%
87.5%
88.7% 89.0%
4
7
Okeecho
bee
57.2
%
57.9
%
62.4
%
64.4
% 64.9%
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District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
4
8 Orange
70.6
%
69.7
%
73.6
%
75.9
% 79.0%4
9 Osceola
63.2
%
65.5
%
69.3
%
78.4
% 83.3%
5
0
Palm
Beach
68.2
%
70.2
%
73.6
%
77.7
% 81.9%5
1 Pasco
68.1
%
67.8
%
73.4
%
77.8
% 81.9%
52 Pinellas
66.1%
66.3%
71.4%
77.2% 77.7%
5
3 Polk
65.4
%
67.2
%
69.9
%
71.6
% 73.2%5
4 Putnam
68.4
%
71.0
%
71.1
%
70.4
% 74.6%
55 St. Johns
75.7%
76.7%
87.1%
89.3% 92.1%
56 St. Lucie
72.7%
75.3%
77.9%
81.0% 79.1%
57
SantaRosa
84.2%
85.9%
86.4%
88.1% 88.3%
5
8 Sarasota
75.6
%
78.8
%
81.5
%
80.5
% 84.3%5
9 Seminole
84.2
%
85.8
%
90.2
%
92.0
% 93.8%
60 Sumter
74.5%
77.6%
81.6%
83.2% 86.9%
6
1
Suwanne
e
62.5
%
67.9
%
63.2
%
61.7
% 62.7%62 Taylor
76.1%
74.7%
70.6%
72.9% 73.7%
6
3 Union
74.5
%
81.7
%
71.4
%
80.7
% 76.4%6
4 Volusia
80.2
%
80.9
%
80.3
%
80.5
% 81.2%
65 Wakulla
74.6%
78.5%
78.1%
80.0% 82.7%
6
6 Walton
75.2
%
72.0
%
76.5
%
79.4
% 83.2%
67
Washington
69.4%
70.4%
82.7%
84.5% 84.4%
6
8
Deaf/Bli
nd
89.5
%
89.5
%
95.1
%
91.8
% 88.8%6
9
Dozier/O
kee 3.0% 5.6% 4.9% 9.1% #
72 FAU
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0% 100.0%
7
3 FSU
91.5
%
95.7
%
93.5
%
97.8
% 97.9%
11
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District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
7
4 FAMU
78.9
%
78.1
%
67.5
%
93.5
% 94.6%7
5 UF
98.0
%
93.8
%
95.9
%
95.6
% 96.5%
FLORID
A
68.9
%
70.3
%
73.1
%
76.3
% 79.0%*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
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Table 8: NCLB Graduation Rates, 2005-06 through 2009-10*
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
01 Alachua
66.4%
63.1%
64.7%
63.9% 73.2%
0
2 Baker
70.1
%
74.4
%
74.9
%
83.5
% 74.1%0
3 Bay
74.2
%
75.3
%
76.3
%
77.9
% 79.1%
0
4 Bradford
62.4
%
63.4
%
68.3
%
72.1
% 66.9%0
5 Brevard
88.5
%
89.6
%
90.8
%
93.1
% 93.2%
06 Broward
66.3%
65.0%
68.6%
73.1% 76.6%
0
7 Calhoun
81.8
%
79.0
%
89.3
%
85.3
% 86.8%0
8 Charlotte
76.6
%
78.9
%
82.6
%
82.6
% 80.3%09 Citrus
71.1%
73.3%
74.9%
81.7% 83.7%
1
0 Clay
72.2
%
73.6
%
75.6
%
79.8
% 84.4%
11 Collier
70.4%
70.1%
71.9%
74.5% 76.9%
1
2
Columbi
a
61.2
%
68.1
%
72.3
%
80.3
% 78.8%1
3 Dade
58.5
%
63.0
%
65.0
%
68.2
% 72.0%
14 DeSoto
67.0%
67.6%
62.4%
69.0% 64.5%
1
5 Dixie
69.6
%
71.7
%
72.4
%
72.7
% 65.8%
16 Duval
59.0%
61.3%
62.9%
66.6% 69.9%
1
7
Escambi
a
69.5
%
70.4
%
70.1
%
73.2
% 72.4%1
8 Flagler
75.9
%
72.4
%
76.6
%
77.2
% 80.9%
1
9 Franklin
60.4
%
54.1
%
56.3
%
82.6
% 72.0%2
0 Gadsden
41.5
%
51.5
%
54.8
%
62.6
% 60.2%
21 Gilchrist
78.2%
85.6%
89.0%
95.3% 92.7%
2
2 Glades
57.3
%
59.7
%
41.4
%
61.0
% 63.6%2
3 Gulf
80.3
%
84.5
%
86.9
%
88.8
% 95.5%
13
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
14/30
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2
4 Hamilton
61.5
%
63.0
%
58.3
%
53.6
% 60.1%2
5 Hardee
66.1
%
66.4
%
61.9
%
66.0
% 72.3%
2
6 Hendry
65.2
%
63.1
%
68.4
%
71.4
% 79.2%2
7
Hernand
o
70.4
%
70.5
%
73.9
%
75.4
% 82.6%
28
Highlands
64.2%
67.7%
65.1%
73.2% 75.0%
2
9
Hillsboro
ugh
74.7
%
76.4
%
77.8
%
82.4
% 81.7%3
0 Holmes
66.7
%
72.2
%
82.3
%
85.2
% 80.2%
31
IndianRiver
80.2%
80.1%
80.8%
83.8% 85.6%
32 Jackson
80.5%
76.4%
82.8%
79.7% 84.7%
33 Jefferson
50.0%
53.5%
46.2%
50.0% 49.2%
3
4 Lafayette
74.4
%
77.8
%
88.0
%
78.1
% 84.4%3
5 Lake
67.0
%
69.8
%
75.1
%
77.9
% 79.0%
36 Lee
68.0%
68.9%
74.7%
75.6% 78.0%
3
7 Leon
72.9
%
76.2
%
77.5
%
77.8
% 76.6%38 Levy
60.8%
61.7%
70.4%
66.3% 69.7%
3
9 Liberty
81.8
%
79.7
%
87.9
%
86.0
% 87.6%4
0 Madison
49.2
%
57.7
%
61.5
%
75.6
% 72.2%
41 Manatee
71.0%
72.4%
73.8%
74.3% 74.4%
4
2 Marion
65.4
%
68.7
%
69.0
%
75.3
% 76.4%
43 Martin
90.7%
87.3%
89.6%
90.4% 88.8%
4
4 Monroe
72.7
%
79.4
%
81.8
%
83.7
% 82.6%4
5 Nassau
79.2
%
76.7
%
76.9
%
82.0
% 89.2%
46 Okaloosa
84.5%
83.2%
89.7%
90.0% 89.9%
4
7
Okeecho
bee
59.4
%
60.7
%
67.3
%
66.2
% 68.7%
14
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
15/30
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
4
8 Orange
69.0
%
68.6
%
72.9
%
75.3
% 77.9%4
9 Osceola
60.3
%
62.3
%
65.6
%
75.6
% 79.5%
5
0
Palm
Beach
66.9
%
69.5
%
73.0
%
78.0
% 80.2%5
1 Pasco
69.6
%
69.2
%
75.5
%
79.8
% 84.2%
52 Pinellas
65.2%
65.9%
71.9%
78.3% 77.0%
5
3 Polk
63.1
%
65.3
%
68.1
%
70.0
% 71.2%5
4 Putnam
67.3
%
70.7
%
70.1
%
69.9
% 71.2%
55 St. Johns
75.4%
75.6%
87.4%
89.1% 90.5%
56 St. Lucie
71.2%
73.7%
76.0%
79.5% 77.6%
57
SantaRosa
82.2%
84.1%
85.1%
85.4% 86.2%
5
8 Sarasota
76.2
%
79.7
%
82.2
%
82.7
% 84.1%5
9 Seminole
83.6
%
85.7
%
89.5
%
92.0
% 92.6%
60 Sumter
71.3%
77.2%
77.3%
80.3% 84.0%
6
1
Suwanne
e
63.5
%
70.4
%
67.2
%
69.7
% 72.6%62 Taylor
74.3%
70.0%
69.7%
70.6% 70.0%
6
3 Union
75.8
%
79.6
%
69.8
%
76.3
% 75.8%6
4 Volusia
76.7
%
76.7
%
77.1
%
76.7
% 78.7%
65 Wakulla
72.1%
75.2%
75.8%
79.3% 81.7%
6
6 Walton
74.9
%
72.2
%
80.0
%
80.5
% 82.2%
67
Washington
69.0%
69.5%
81.1%
83.3% 82.9%
6
8
Deaf/Bli
nd
37.2
%
51.2
%
49.4
%
54.1
% 55.0%6
9
Dozier/O
kee
52.6
%
49.4
%
45.1
%
60.0
% 60.0%
72 FAU
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0% 100.0%
7
3 FSU
95.0
%
97.9
%
98.6
%
98.5
% 97.9%
15
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
16/30
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
7
4 FAMU
81.6
%
78.1
%
70.0
%
93.5
% 94.6%7
5 UF
98.0
%
93.8
%
95.9
%
95.6
% 96.5%
FLORID
A
68.3
%
69.8
%
72.8
%
76.2
% 78.2%*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
16
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
17/30
Table 9: Graduation Rates, Florida's Calculation, 2005-06 through 2009-10*
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
01 Alachua
69.8%
68.2%
68.3%
66.7% 76.6%
0
2 Baker
73.1
%
77.9
%
77.5
%
87.5
% 77.3%0
3 Bay
77.5
%
78.7
%
78.5
%
79.4
% 81.9%
0
4 Bradford
69.5
%
70.7
%
75.4
%
78.4
% 71.1%0
5 Brevard
90.7
%
92.1
%
93.3
%
95.3
% 95.8%
06 Broward
67.8%
66.3%
68.8%
74.2% 77.9%
0
7 Calhoun
89.6
%
82.5
%
93.3
%
92.2
% 89.0%0
8 Charlotte
78.0
%
81.6
%
84.6
%
84.3
% 82.4%09 Citrus
73.2%
76.1%
77.8%
84.6% 85.6%
1
0 Clay
73.8
%
75.3
%
77.6
%
81.7
% 85.9%
11 Collier
74.7%
73.6%
75.8%
78.7% 80.4%
1
2
Columbi
a
67.4
%
74.1
%
77.6
%
87.8
% 88.5%1
3 Dade
59.2
%
63.9
%
65.8
%
68.9
% 72.6%
14 DeSoto
70.0%
70.5%
66.5%
72.0% 69.0%
1
5 Dixie
70.4
%
75.3
%
76.6
%
74.0
% 66.4%
16 Duval
60.5%
64.3%
65.9%
69.6% 73.1%
1
7
Escambi
a
74.8
%
75.2
%
75.7
%
77.8
% 78.8%1
8 Flagler
78.4
%
77.1
%
80.9
%
81.3
% 83.5%
1
9 Franklin
60.7
%
56.5
%
57.8
%
86.0
% 81.6%2
0 Gadsden
43.9
%
53.3
%
56.1
%
64.2
% 63.4%
21 Gilchrist
78.7%
86.0%
92.1%
96.5% 94.9%
2
2 Glades
63.4
%
62.3
%
43.7
%
63.0
% 66.2%2
3 Gulf
83.8
%
85.1
%
89.1
%
89.5
% 96.2%
17
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
18/30
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2
4 Hamilton
63.2
%
68.1
%
60.0
%
58.6
% 65.5%2
5 Hardee
70.3
%
72.7
%
66.5
%
72.6
% 76.0%
2
6 Hendry
72.1
%
68.3
%
74.0
%
76.5
% 81.9%2
7
Hernand
o
74.1
%
75.1
%
76.9
%
78.5
% 84.9%
28
Highlands
69.6%
73.0%
71.2%
76.3% 78.1%
2
9
Hillsboro
ugh
77.3
%
79.1
%
80.0
%
84.6
% 84.4%3
0 Holmes
71.3
%
76.2
%
84.3
%
87.3
% 81.9%
31
IndianRiver
84.7%
82.9%
83.5%
86.1% 87.2%
32 Jackson
87.8%
81.7%
85.7%
85.0% 87.9%
33 Jefferson
53.5%
64.2%
57.5%
62.8% 51.6%
3
4 Lafayette
81.7
%
79.4
%
92.0
%
79.7
% 88.3%3
5 Lake
70.1
%
73.5
%
79.3
%
80.8
% 82.3%
36 Lee
71.5%
71.8%
77.8%
78.3% 80.6%
3
7 Leon
76.2
%
79.0
%
81.2
%
81.0
% 80.2%38 Levy
65.6%
66.4%
72.1%
67.9% 71.4%
3
9 Liberty
89.7
%
90.7
%
95.9
%
93.8
% 91.2%4
0 Madison
58.5
%
66.9
%
69.5
%
80.4
% 79.7%
41 Manatee
76.9%
78.7%
79.3%
79.4% 79.2%
4
2 Marion
71.8
%
74.9
%
73.8
%
78.9
% 79.5%
43 Martin
93.2%
91.2%
91.9%
93.9% 90.4%
4
4 Monroe
75.5
%
83.6
%
85.5
%
87.4
% 86.3%4
5 Nassau
81.8
%
80.7
%
81.1
%
84.8
% 91.8%
46 Okaloosa
86.0%
84.7%
90.5%
91.7% 91.9%
4
7
Okeecho
bee
62.8
%
64.0
%
70.7
%
69.3
% 71.7%
18
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
19/30
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
4
8 Orange
72.2
%
71.7
%
75.6
%
77.4
% 79.6%4
9 Osceola
64.5
%
66.6
%
67.5
%
79.2
% 83.5%
5
0
Palm
Beach
69.3
%
71.8
%
75.6
%
80.1
% 82.9%5
1 Pasco
74.4
%
73.7
%
79.5
%
83.5
% 87.2%
52 Pinellas
67.0%
67.3%
74.4%
80.6% 78.8%
5
3 Polk
68.8
%
70.6
%
73.6
%
74.7
% 75.9%5
4 Putnam
76.4
%
78.6
%
78.0
%
78.4
% 82.0%
55 St. Johns
76.7%
78.3%
89.4%
90.8% 92.6%
56 St. Lucie
72.7%
75.4%
77.9%
81.1% 79.1%
57
SantaRosa
85.5%
86.8%
87.6%
89.0% 88.8%
5
8 Sarasota
79.9
%
83.5
%
86.0
%
85.1
% 86.1%5
9 Seminole
83.4
%
86.7
%
91.1
%
93.0
% 94.2%
60 Sumter
76.3%
81.1%
83.5%
85.0% 87.7%
6
1
Suwanne
e
65.1
%
74.4
%
71.6
%
72.4
% 74.5%62 Taylor
78.3%
77.4%
74.0%
75.1% 74.7%
6
3 Union
76.7
%
81.7
%
71.4
%
80.7
% 76.4%6
4 Volusia
81.9
%
82.6
%
81.9
%
82.0
% 81.9%
65 Wakulla
77.6%
82.5%
81.6%
84.0% 84.9%
6
6 Walton
76.1
%
74.2
%
81.5
%
82.3
% 85.1%
67
Washington
69.8%
71.5%
83.1%
85.0% 84.4%
6
8
Deaf/Bli
nd
88.4
%
89.5
%
95.1
%
91.8
% 88.8%6
9
Dozier/O
kee
58.2
%
55.6
%
59.5
%
72.7
% 60.0%
72 FAU
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0% 100.0%
7
3 FSU
95.0
%
97.9
%
98.6
%
98.5
% 97.9%
19
8/8/2019 Grad Rate 0910
20/30
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
7
4 FAMU
89.5
%
78.1
%
70.0
%
93.5
% 94.6%7
5 UF
98.0
%
93.8
%
95.9
%
95.6
% 96.5%
FLORID
A
71.0
%
72.4
%
75.4
%
78.6
% 80.7%*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
20
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Table 10: NGA Graduation Rates by Race, 2009-10*
DistrictWhite, Non-
Hispanic
Black, Non-
Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/Pacific
Islander
American
Indian/Alaskan
Native Multiracial Total
01 Alachua 84.2% 64.0% 81.0% 84.6% # 79.2% 76.4%
02 Baker 78.3% 57.1% # # # 75.9%
03 Bay 83.6% 71.2% 68.3% 80.0% # 87.0% 81.1%
04 Bradford 64.7% 64.2% # # # # 63.6%
05 Brevard 96.0% 92.8% 93.0% 93.9% 88.2% 94.4% 95.3%
06 Broward 85.2% 68.8% 80.7% 91.2% 63.3% 83.7% 77.7%07 Calhoun 88.9% 81.8% # # # 88.2%
08 Charlotte 80.5% 71.3% 72.4% 81.8% # 84.6% 79.3%09 Citrus 83.8% 58.9% 93.8% 88.2% # 85.0% 82.9%
10 Clay 82.9% 65.7% 64.5% 82.6% # 75.9% 78.4%
11 Collier 88.1% 74.9% 69.2% 94.3% # 75.0% 79.4%
12 Columbia 89.4% 76.6% 95.5% 100.0% # 92.9% 87.0%
13 Dade 82.2% 63.7% 73.9% 86.2% 78.9% 81.4% 72.1%
14 DeSoto 60.7% 50.0% 67.5% # 61.0%
15 Dixie 66.9% 61.1% # # 66.4%
16 Duval 72.9% 59.7% 63.7% 78.5% 70.6% 75.5% 66.6%
17 Escambia 86.9% 66.5% 67.1% 88.1% 82.6% 79.1% 77.9%
18 Flagler 85.0% 79.4% 81.0% 92.0% # 76.9% 83.5%
19 Franklin 75.4% 83.3% # # 78.7%
20 Gadsden 63.6% 58.8% 52.5% # # 58.1%
21 Gilchrist 94.5% # # # 92.1%
22 Glades 71.9% 70.0% 50.0% # 63.6%
23 Gulf 95.9% 96.3% # # # 95.5%
24 Hamilton 69.6% 60.6% 45.5% 63.0%
25 Hardee 83.0% 60.0% 71.5% # 75.1%
26 Hendry 85.8% 84.0% 78.9% # # 61.5% 81.4%
27 Hernando 79.5% 75.5% 76.1% 83.3% # 88.5% 79.0%28 Highlands 76.6% 73.6% 64.2% # # 70.6% 73.4%
29 Hillsborough 87.9% 75.1% 76.5% 94.4% 85.0% 86.3% 82.3%
30 Holmes 80.5% # # # # 80.6%
31 Indian River 84.5% 73.2% 78.9% 95.5% # 89.7% 82.1%
32 Jackson 82.7% 78.0% 80.0% # # 81.5%
33 Jefferson 27.8% 61.0% # # 50.8%
34 Lafayette 91.4% # # # 88.3%
35 Lake 84.6% 68.8% 75.3% 92.7% 90.9% 86.4% 80.8%
36 Lee 86.4% 67.1% 74.4% 88.7% 78.6% 80.5% 80.3%
37 Leon 88.7% 62.3% 82.6% 96.4% # 80.0% 77.6%
38 Levy 71.7% 71.2% 59.4% # # # 70.7%
39 Liberty 83.6% 52.6% # # # 75.3%
40 Madison 64.9% 64.9% # 65.0%41 Manatee 82.5% 67.9% 62.4% 86.4% # 74.3% 76.4%
42 Marion 80.5% 70.4% 74.6% 91.5% # 75.7% 77.8%
43 Martin 92.8% 82.3% 76.7% 95.8% # 82.6% 89.8%
44 Monroe 90.9% 71.4% 78.7% 90.0% # 66.7% 85.4%
45 Nassau 90.4% 79.0% 91.7% 90.0% # 100.0% 89.5%
46 Okaloosa 90.2% 81.7% 83.7% 93.3% # 90.4% 89.0%47 Okeechobee 68.7% 52.2% 61.4% # 64.3% # 64.9%
48 Orange 87.1% 69.8% 75.0% 92.1% 77.2% 81.2% 79.0%
49 Osceola 88.9% 79.1% 79.7% 91.4% 81.3% 86.8% 83.3%
50 Palm Beach 90.6% 70.4% 79.6% 94.6% 78.2% 86.1% 81.9%
51 Pasco 82.6% 82.9% 75.7% 88.3% 75.0% 84.4% 81.9%
52 Pinellas 83.0% 62.6% 64.8% 87.1% 81.5% 77.3% 77.7%
53 Polk 78.4% 65.3% 66.2% 92.7% # 78.1% 73.2%
54 Putnam 73.9% 79.5% 67.8% # # 76.9% 74.6%
55 St. Johns 93.7% 78.9% 87.0% 96.4% # 89.3% 92.1%
56 St. Lucie 85.5% 69.5% 80.8% 92.0% 90.9% 84.3% 79.1%
57 Santa Rosa 88.9% 83.3% 83.6% 75.0% 100.0% 93.3% 88.3%
58 Sarasota 87.7% 70.9% 72.1% 93.8% # 80.7% 84.3%
59 Seminole 96.1% 88.5% 89.1% 96.6% 92.9% 95.3% 93.8%
60 Sumter 90.3% 80.7% 72.7% # # # 86.9%
61 Suwannee 65.6% 58.0% 36.4% # # # 62.7%
62 Taylor 75.7% 68.3% # # 73.7%
63 Union 77.8% 73.1% # # 76.4%
64 Volusia 84.5% 72.7% 72.0% 89.0% # 84.0% 81.2%
65 Wakulla 82.5% 81.3% # # # # 82.7%66 Walton 86.0% 69.4% 55.0% # # # 83.2%
67 Washington 85.7% 77.1% # # # # 84.4%
68 Deaf/Blind 87.8% 94.4% 85.0% # 88.8%
69 Dozier/Okee 5.3% 3.6% # 4.0%
72 FAU # # # # 100.0%
73 FSU 97.3% 100.0% 100.0% # 100.0% 97.9%
74 FAMU 94.6% 94.6%
75 UF 95.7% 96.7% 100.0% # # 96.5%
FLORIDA 85.4% 68.4% 75.3% 89.8% 76.8% 83.7% 79.0%
*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
21
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Table 11: NCLB Graduation Rates by Race, 2009-10*
DistrictWhite, Non-
Hispanic
Black, Non-
Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/Pacific
Islander
American
Indian/Alaskan
Native Multiracial Total
01 Alachua 82.5% 58.3% 79.6% 84.6% # 73.6% 73.2%
02 Baker 77.6% 50.0% # # # 74.1%
03 Bay 81.7% 68.3% 66.7% 80.0% 77.8% 87.0% 79.1%
04 Bradford 69.4% 64.2% # # # # 66.9%
05 Brevard 94.5% 86.9% 91.2% 93.0% 88.2% 93.4% 93.2%
06 Broward 84.3% 67.4% 79.7% 90.6% 56.7% 83.4% 76.6%07 Calhoun 87.0% 81.8% # # # 86.8%
08 Charlotte 81.9% 69.9% 71.3% 81.8% # 84.6% 80.3%09 Citrus 85.0% 60.3% 89.6% 88.2% # 82.5% 83.7%
10 Clay 88.0% 72.0% 79.7% 82.6% # 79.3% 84.4%
11 Collier 86.2% 72.0% 66.1% 94.3% # 72.5% 76.9%
12 Columbia 82.5% 64.1% 86.4% 100.0% # 78.6% 78.8%
13 Dade 83.3% 62.8% 74.0% 86.5% 78.9% 81.8% 72.0%
14 DeSoto 68.0% 50.0% 65.1% # 64.5%
15 Dixie 66.1% 61.1% # # # 65.8%
16 Duval 77.1% 62.4% 67.1% 79.8% 82.4% 79.5% 69.9%
17 Escambia 83.3% 58.1% 65.8% 86.9% 78.3% 76.7% 72.4%
18 Flagler 83.0% 73.9% 78.5% 92.0% # 76.9% 80.9%
19 Franklin 68.4% 83.3% # # 72.0%
20 Gadsden 54.5% 61.2% 57.5% # # 60.2%
21 Gilchrist 93.3% # # # 92.7%
22 Glades 68.8% 65.0% 58.3% # 63.6%
23 Gulf 95.9% 96.3% # # # 95.5%
24 Hamilton 69.6% 54.9% 45.5% 60.1%
25 Hardee 79.3% 60.0% 69.1% # 72.3%
26 Hendry 81.7% 84.0% 77.0% # # # 79.2%
27 Hernando 83.1% 77.7% 80.2% 83.3% # 92.3% 82.6%28 Highlands 80.5% 68.6% 65.2% # # 76.5% 75.0%
29 Hillsborough 88.1% 72.1% 76.1% 93.8% 85.0% 86.7% 81.7%
30 Holmes 80.5% # # # # 80.2%
31 Indian River 88.3% 74.5% 83.4% 95.5% # 96.6% 85.6%
32 Jackson 88.0% 77.4% 80.0% # # 84.7%
33 Jefferson 27.8% 58.5% # # 49.2%
34 Lafayette 86.2% # # # 84.4%
35 Lake 83.1% 64.6% 74.4% 92.7% 90.9% 84.1% 79.0%
36 Lee 84.5% 62.2% 72.8% 88.7% 78.6% 79.9% 78.0%
37 Leon 88.8% 59.9% 82.6% 96.4% # 80.0% 76.6%
38 Levy 71.7% 65.2% 59.4% # # # 69.7%
39 Liberty 88.5% 89.5% # # # 87.6%
40 Madison 83.0% 64.2% # 72.2%41 Manatee 81.4% 62.9% 59.4% 84.7% # 75.7% 74.4%
42 Marion 79.6% 66.8% 73.4% 91.5% # 78.6% 76.4%
43 Martin 92.4% 78.8% 73.8% 95.8% # 82.6% 88.8%
44 Monroe 88.7% 69.6% 74.3% 90.0% # 60.0% 82.6%
45 Nassau 89.7% 81.5% 91.7% 100.0% # 100.0% 89.2%
46 Okaloosa 90.3% 85.7% 86.7% 95.0% # 93.3% 89.9%47 Okeechobee 72.7% 60.9% 63.0% # 64.3% # 68.7%
48 Orange 86.4% 68.2% 73.5% 91.8% 80.7% 80.6% 77.9%
49 Osceola 84.8% 76.8% 75.3% 91.4% 81.3% 84.4% 79.5%
50 Palm Beach 89.7% 67.8% 77.5% 93.8% 80.0% 84.7% 80.2%
51 Pasco 85.0% 84.4% 77.5% 90.4% 85.0% 85.9% 84.2%
52 Pinellas 82.6% 60.3% 65.2% 87.1% 77.8% 77.3% 77.0%
53 Polk 77.2% 61.3% 64.1% 90.9% # 75.2% 71.2%
54 Putnam 74.5% 64.8% 63.2% # # 76.9% 71.2%
55 St. Johns 92.4% 71.7% 89.1% 96.4% # 89.3% 90.5%
56 St. Lucie 84.6% 67.5% 78.8% 88.0% 90.9% 84.3% 77.6%
57 Santa Rosa 87.2% 77.2% 83.6% 72.5% 100.0% 86.7% 86.2%
58 Sarasota 87.5% 70.5% 72.1% 93.8% # 81.8% 84.1%
59 Seminole 95.2% 85.7% 87.6% 96.0% 85.7% 94.4% 92.6%
60 Sumter 88.6% 72.3% 70.5% # # # 84.0%
61 Suwannee 76.5% 62.3% 45.5% # # # 72.6%
62 Taylor 74.3% 56.1% # # 70.0%
63 Union 77.8% 69.2% # # 75.8%
64 Volusia 82.7% 66.5% 69.9% 87.9% # 82.1% 78.7%
65 Wakulla 81.4% 78.1% # # # # 81.7%66 Walton 84.7% 63.9% 60.0% # # # 82.2%
67 Washington 83.7% 77.1% # # # # 82.9%
68 Deaf/Blind 53.7% 61.1% 55.0% # 55.0%
69 Dozier/Okee 78.9% 42.9% # 60.0%
72 FAU # # # # 100.0%
73 FSU 97.3% 100.0% 100.0% # 100.0% 97.9%
74 FAMU 94.6% 94.6%
75 UF 95.7% 96.7% 100.0% # # 96.5%
FLORIDA 85.2% 66.6% 74.6% 89.6% 77.9% 83.5% 78.2%
*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
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Table 12: Florida Graduation Rates by Race, 2009-10*
DistrictWhite, Non-
Hispanic
Black, Non-
Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/Pacific
Islander
American
Indian/Alaskan
Native Multiracial Total
01 Alachua 84.4% 64.2% 81.1% 84.6% # 79.2% 76.6%
02 Baker 79.7% 59.5% # # # 77.3%
03 Bay 84.4% 71.9% 69.8% 80.0% # 87.0% 81.9%
04 Bradford 74.0% 67.9% # # # # 71.1%
05 Brevard 96.6% 93.2% 93.4% 94.0% 88.2% 95.1% 95.8%
06 Broward 85.4% 69.0% 80.9% 91.5% 63.3% 84.1% 77.9%07 Calhoun 89.7% 81.8% # # # 89.0%
08 Charlotte 84.0% 73.4% 73.6% 81.8% # 84.6% 82.4%09 Citrus 86.7% 61.6% 94.0% 88.2% # 85.0% 85.6%
10 Clay 89.4% 74.5% 80.9% 83.7% # 79.3% 85.9%
11 Collier 89.1% 75.1% 70.4% 94.6% # 75.0% 80.4%
12 Columbia 91.1% 77.0% 100.0% 100.0% # 92.9% 88.5%
13 Dade 83.6% 63.9% 74.3% 86.5% 78.9% 81.8% 72.6%
14 DeSoto 71.0% 60.0% 69.0% # 69.0%
15 Dixie 66.9% 61.1% # # # 66.4%
16 Duval 79.8% 66.2% 69.1% 81.6% 82.4% 81.2% 73.1%
17 Escambia 87.9% 66.9% 68.4% 88.2% 83.3% 80.4% 78.8%
18 Flagler 85.0% 79.4% 81.0% 92.0% # 76.9% 83.5%
19 Franklin 79.3% 83.3% # # 81.6%
20 Gadsden 63.6% 64.0% 60.0% # # 63.4%
21 Gilchrist 95.7% # # # 94.9%
22 Glades 71.9% 70.0% 58.3% # 66.2%
23 Gulf 96.8% 96.3% # # # 96.2%
24 Hamilton 73.2% 62.5% 45.5% 65.5%
25 Hardee 84.0% 60.0% 72.2% # 76.0%
26 Hendry 86.4% 84.1% 79.3% # # 64.3% 81.9%
27 Hernando 85.3% 81.4% 82.9% 83.3% # 92.6% 84.9%28 Highlands 82.6% 75.5% 68.1% # # 76.5% 78.1%
29 Hillsborough 89.9% 76.9% 78.9% 95.0% 88.1% 88.9% 84.4%
30 Holmes 81.9% # # # # 81.9%
31 Indian River 89.3% 78.4% 84.9% 95.7% # 96.6% 87.2%
32 Jackson 90.7% 81.9% 80.0% # # 87.9%
33 Jefferson 31.6% 61.0% # # 51.6%
34 Lafayette 91.4% # # # 88.3%
35 Lake 85.9% 71.0% 76.6% 92.7% 91.7% 86.4% 82.3%
36 Lee 86.8% 67.2% 74.6% 88.7% 78.6% 80.7% 80.6%
37 Leon 90.4% 66.2% 83.3% 96.4% 100.0% 81.0% 80.2%
38 Levy 72.6% 71.2% 59.4% # # # 71.4%
39 Liberty 92.1% 94.7% # # # 91.2%
40 Madison 86.5% 74.6% # # 79.7%41 Manatee 85.6% 69.9% 64.8% 86.4% # 78.4% 79.2%
42 Marion 82.4% 71.8% 76.2% 91.5% # 78.9% 79.5%
43 Martin 93.4% 82.6% 77.5% 95.8% # 84.0% 90.4%
44 Monroe 91.9% 73.7% 78.8% 90.0% # 66.7% 86.3%
45 Nassau 92.6% 82.7% 91.7% 100.0% # 100.0% 91.8%
46 Okaloosa 92.2% 90.5% 86.7% 95.0% # 93.3% 91.9%47 Okeechobee 75.1% 67.4% 66.4% # 64.3% # 71.7%
48 Orange 87.9% 70.5% 75.6% 92.3% 82.5% 81.7% 79.6%
49 Osceola 89.1% 79.3% 80.0% 91.4% 81.3% 86.9% 83.5%
50 Palm Beach 91.5% 71.4% 80.5% 94.6% 80.4% 86.9% 82.9%
51 Pasco 88.2% 88.3% 80.2% 90.5% 85.0% 89.4% 87.2%
52 Pinellas 84.1% 64.1% 66.2% 87.9% 81.5% 78.7% 78.8%
53 Polk 81.3% 67.7% 68.2% 93.7% # 80.2% 75.9%
54 Putnam 82.2% 83.7% 77.3% # # 78.6% 82.0%
55 St. Johns 94.0% 80.6% 89.1% 96.4% # 89.3% 92.6%
56 St. Lucie 85.5% 69.5% 80.8% 92.0% 90.9% 84.3% 79.1%
57 Santa Rosa 89.5% 83.3% 83.6% 75.0% 100.0% 93.3% 88.8%
58 Sarasota 89.2% 74.3% 74.4% 93.8% # 81.8% 86.1%
59 Seminole 96.3% 89.0% 89.6% 96.6% 92.9% 95.8% 94.2%
60 Sumter 91.0% 82.1% 72.7% # # # 87.7%
61 Suwannee 78.2% 65.2% 45.5% # # # 74.5%
62 Taylor 76.7% 68.3% # # # 74.7%
63 Union 77.8% 73.1% # # 76.4%
64 Volusia 85.2% 73.4% 73.0% 89.1% # 84.3% 81.9%
65 Wakulla 84.6% 81.8% # # # # 84.9%66 Walton 87.2% 75.0% 60.0% # # # 85.1%
67 Washington 85.7% 77.1% # # # # 84.4%
68 Deaf/Blind 87.8% 94.4% 85.0% # 88.8%
69 Dozier/Okee 78.9% 42.9% # 60.0%
72 FAU # # # # 100.0%
73 FSU 97.3% 100.0% 100.0% # 100.0% 97.9%
74 FAMU 94.6% 94.6%
75 UF 95.7% 96.7% 100.0% # # 96.5%
FLORIDA 87.4% 70.1% 76.4% 90.4% 79.9% 85.3% 80.7%
*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 10/27/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the cohort is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the cohort.
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Table 13: Dropout Rates by Race, 2009-10*
DistrictWhite, Non-
Hispanic
Black, Non-
Hispanic Hispanic
Asian/Pacific
Islander
American
Indian/Alaskan
Native Multiracial Total
01 Alachua 1.4% 3.4% 1.9% 0.6% 0.0% 3.2% 2.2%
02 Baker 3.9% 3.5% 0.0% # # 3.2% 3.8%
03 Bay 1.2% 2.3% 1.5% 1.2% 2.0% 1.8% 1.4%
04 Bradford 4.9% 5.3% 11.5% # # # 5.1%
05 Brevard 0.5% 0.6% 0.5% 0.2% 0.0% 0.6% 0.5%
06 Broward 1.0% 2.5% 0.9% 0.5% 1.5% 0.9% 1.6%07 Calhoun 2.5% 1.0% 0.0% # # 0.0% 2.2%
08 Charlotte 2.9% 3.4% 4.7% 2.4% 6.9% 3.7% 3.1%09 Citrus 1.2% 1.0% 1.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.6% 1.2%
10 Clay 1.3% 1.7% 1.1% 0.6% 3.1% 1.8% 1.3%
11 Collier 1.4% 1.4% 3.0% 0.0% 2.6% 0.4% 2.0%
12 Columbia 0.6% 1.0% 0.0% 0.0% # 1.2% 0.6%
13 Dade 2.9% 4.9% 3.8% 2.0% 1.7% 1.9% 4.0%
14 DeSoto 4.1% 3.8% 8.6% # # 4.0% 5.2%
15 Dixie 4.6% 1.7% # # # 4.2%
16 Duval 1.9% 2.6% 1.6% 0.9% 1.3% 0.9% 2.2%
17 Escambia 0.9% 2.7% 1.3% 0.2% 3.0% 1.2% 1.6%
18 Flagler 1.7% 2.9% 0.7% 0.0% 6.3% 2.0% 1.8%
19 Franklin 0.4% 0.0% 0.0% # 0.3%
20 Gadsden 1.6% 1.5% 2.2% # 0.0% 1.6%
21 Gilchrist 0.3% 0.0% 0.0% # # # 0.2%
22 Glades 0.9% 1.3% 2.2% # # 1.4%
23 Gulf 0.4% 0.0% 0.0% # # 0.0% 0.3%
24 Hamilton 0.8% 7.3% 8.0% # # 4.4%
25 Hardee 2.6% 4.0% 3.6% # # # 3.3%
26 Hendry 3.3% 3.1% 3.7% 8.3% 0.0% 8.3% 3.5%
27 Hernando 2.6% 3.2% 2.1% 0.9% 5.7% 2.6% 2.6%28 Highlands 2.9% 4.1% 3.4% 0.0% 3.3% 3.1% 3.2%
29 Hillsborough 0.5% 1.2% 0.9% 0.1% 0.0% 0.6% 0.7%
30 Holmes 2.1% 4.7% 0.0% 0.0% # # 2.2%
31 Indian River 2.0% 1.1% 1.5% 0.0% 0.0% 1.9% 1.7%
32 Jackson 1.5% 2.3% 0.0% 7.7% 0.0% 4.7% 1.8%
33 Jefferson 11.3% 7.1% # # # 7.8%
34 Lafayette 0.4% 0.0% 0.0% # # 0.0% 0.3%
35 Lake 2.6% 4.6% 3.2% 1.0% 1.9% 0.9% 3.0%
36 Lee 1.2% 1.6% 1.4% 0.8% 0.0% 1.3% 1.3%
37 Leon 0.4% 1.3% 0.7% 0.4% 0.0% 0.5% 0.8%
38 Levy 5.6% 5.5% 6.9% # # 0.0% 5.5%
39 Liberty 1.9% 0.7% 6.7% # # 1.8%
40 Madison 2.8% 3.5% 0.0% # # # 3.1%41 Manatee 3.0% 5.9% 7.0% 1.8% 5.3% 3.2% 4.3%
42 Marion 0.5% 0.8% 0.3% 0.0% 1.8% 0.8% 0.5%
43 Martin 0.3% 0.9% 2.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.6%
44 Monroe 0.7% 2.5% 1.5% 0.0% # 0.0% 1.1%
45 Nassau 1.3% 1.0% 3.5% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 1.3%
46 Okaloosa 0.4% 0.4% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% 0.4%47 Okeechobee 4.5% 4.6% 4.9% 0.0% 9.0% 0.0% 4.6%
48 Orange 0.5% 1.1% 0.7% 0.1% 0.0% 0.5% 0.7%
49 Osceola 1.0% 1.7% 1.8% 0.0% 1.3% 1.0% 1.4%
50 Palm Beach 1.6% 4.5% 2.9% 2.1% 3.4% 2.9% 2.8%
51 Pasco 1.1% 0.6% 1.2% 0.7% 0.0% 1.2% 1.1%
52 Pinellas 1.8% 4.0% 3.2% 1.1% 8.5% 2.5% 2.4%
53 Polk 4.0% 4.6% 4.1% 1.2% 5.5% 4.1% 4.1%
54 Putnam 3.8% 3.4% 5.3% 7.1% # 2.4% 3.9%
55 St. Johns 0.7% 1.8% 0.7% 1.2% 0.0% 2.6% 0.9%
56 St. Lucie 1.5% 3.5% 2.2% 0.8% 0.0% 1.9% 2.3%
57 Santa Rosa 1.0% 1.0% 0.4% 0.6% 0.0% 1.0% 0.9%
58 Sarasota 1.7% 3.1% 3.6% 0.4% 2.6% 2.0% 2.0%
59 Seminole 0.4% 0.6% 0.3% 0.1% 0.0% 0.5% 0.4%
60 Sumter 2.0% 3.1% 0.8% 0.0% # 2.6% 2.0%
61 Suwannee 2.4% 2.3% 5.8% 4.3% # 5.6% 2.7%
62 Taylor 3.1% 5.0% 4.8% # 0.0% # 3.5%
63 Union 1.5% 2.4% 0.0% # # 0.0% 1.5%
64 Volusia 0.9% 1.4% 1.7% 0.7% 7.4% 1.2% 1.1%
65 Wakulla 3.7% 1.4% 0.0% # # 4.3% 3.4%66 Walton 1.1% 2.4% 1.6% 9.1% 0.0% 0.0% 1.3%
67 Washington 1.6% 2.0% 0.0% # # 0.0% 1.6%
68 Deaf/Blind 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% # # 0.0% 0.0%
69 Dozier/Okee 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
72 FAU 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% # # 0.0%
73 FSU 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% # 0.0% 0.0%
74 FAMU 0.0% # # 0.0%
75 UF 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% # # 0.0% 0.0%
FLORIDA 1.4% 2.9% 2.5% 0.8% 2.2% 1.4% 2.0%
*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) dropout data as of 11/02/10.A pound sign (#) replaces data when the subgroup population is fewer than ten students. A blank cell indicates no students in the subgroup population.
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Table 14: Dropout Rates by District, 2005-06 through 2009-10
District2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10*
01 Alachua 6.1% 6.6% 3.6% 2.6% 2.2%
02 Baker 3.7% 2.8% 1.8% 2.0% 3.8%
03 Bay 2.0% 2.5% 1.7% 0.8% 1.4%
04 Bradford 5.4% 5.1% 5.0% 3.1% 5.1%
05 Brevard 0.8% 0.9% 0.7% 0.6% 0.5%
06 Broward 2.7% 3.2% 2.0% 2.1% 1.6%
07 Calhoun 3.0% 3.2% 1.5% 0.6% 2.2%
08 Charlotte 2.5% 1.6% 1.5% 2.8% 3.1%
09 Citrus 4.7% 4.1% 1.7% 1.4% 1.2%
10 Clay 1.9% 2.3% 2.0% 1.2% 1.3%
11 Collier 2.0% 2.7% 2.5% 2.2% 2.0%
12 Columbia 2.1% 2.3% 0.6% 0.7% 0.6%
13 Dade 6.7% 5.8% 4.5% 3.9% 4.0%
14 DeSoto 6.1% 4.2% 3.4% 4.6% 5.2%
15 Dixie 5.6% 4.4% 4.3% 5.1% 4.2%
16 Duval 6.6% 5.2% 3.3% 4.8% 2.2%
17 Escambia 3.1% 3.3% 4.0% 2.1% 1.6%18 Flagler 1.9% 2.5% 1.0% 2.2% 1.8%
19 Franklin 13.3% 6.7% 2.0% 5.4% 0.3%
20 Gadsden 4.9% 5.4% 1.1% 4.2% 1.6%
21 Gilchrist 2.3% 1.4% 0.7% 0.2% 0.2%
22 Glades 6.9% 13.0% 5.0% 3.8% 1.4%
23 Gulf 2.9% 0.9% 1.3% 1.4% 0.3%
24 Hamilton 5.4% 5.1% 4.4% 3.6% 4.4%
25 Hardee 5.7% 5.1% 6.4% 4.9% 3.3%
26 Hendry 4.2% 3.0% 4.0% 3.1% 3.5%
27 Hernando 4.9% 3.3% 2.8% 2.7% 2.6%
28 Highlands 5.7% 5.4% 4.2% 4.2% 3.2%
29 Hillsborough 2.1% 1.6% 1.8% 1.0% 0.7%
30 Holmes 3.8% 3.4% 2.4% 1.7% 2.2%
31 Indian River 1.0% 1.8% 1.3% 1.5% 1.7%
32 Jackson 1.2% 1.6% 1.4% 2.0% 1.8%
33 Jefferson 7.7% 7.9% 5.3% 1.8% 7.8%
34 Lafayette 2.8% 2.3% 2.8% 0.7% 0.3%
35 Lake 4.7% 4.5% 3.1% 2.9% 3.0%
36 Lee 3.5% 2.4% 1.8% 1.3% 1.3%
37 Leon 2.3% 3.6% 2.1% 3.0% 0.8%
38 Levy 4.8% 4.2% 2.9% 4.2% 5.5%
39 Liberty 0.9% 0.4% 0.0% 1.3% 1.8%
40 Madison 5.5% 5.5% 5.1% 2.4% 3.1%
41 Manatee 3.1% 1.3% 4.4% 3.6% 4.3%
42 Marion 4.2% 3.3% 3.1% 2.6% 0.5%
43 Martin 0.4% 0.6% 0.5% 0.7% 0.6%
44 Monroe 1.5% 1.2% 0.6% 0.6% 1.1%
45 Nassau 3.4% 4.2% 3.5% 2.1% 1.3%
46 Okaloosa 2.2% 1.8% 1.7% 1.0% 0.4%
47 Okeechobee 6.0% 5.3% 5.2% 3.9% 4.6%
48 Orange 1.9% 1.7% 1.5% 1.1% 0.7%
49 Osceola 4.1% 4.2% 2.7% 1.0% 1.4%
50 Palm Beach 3.0% 4.4% 3.9% 2.6% 2.8%
51 Pasco 4.2% 3.5% 2.1% 1.2% 1.1%
52 Pinellas 3.0% 3.4% 2.1% 2.1% 2.4%
53 Polk 4.4% 4.2% 3.8% 4.0% 4.1%
54 Putnam 4.0% 2.9% 5.7% 3.3% 3.9%
55 St. Johns 2.0% 1.8% 1.3% 1.1% 0.9%
56 St. Lucie 2.2% 2.0% 1.3% 1.4% 2.3%
57 Santa Rosa 2.3% 1.9% 1.9% 1.8% 0.9%
58 Sarasota 2.5% 2.7% 2.1% 1.8% 2.0%
59 Seminole 1.2% 1.5% 0.5% 0.4% 0.4%
60 Sumter 2.6% 2.7% 1.8% 3.3% 2.0%
61 Suwannee 4.8% 5.2% 6.8% 3.4% 2.7%
62 Taylor 3.5% 4.7% 4.0% 2.8% 3.5%
63 Union 2.6% 1.8% 1.2% 1.0% 1.5%
64 Volusia 1.4% 1.3% 1.0% 1.3% 1.1%
65 Wakulla 5.7% 2.7% 2.7% 2.9% 3.4%
66 Walton 2.6% 2.3% 1.8% 2.6% 1.3%
67 Washington 3.4% 1.6% 1.7% 1.2% 1.6%
68 Deaf/Blind 0.3% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
69 Dozier/Okee 4.0% 2.9% 1.3% 1.4% 0.0%
72 FAU 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
73 FSU 0.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
74 FAMU 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
75 UF 0.2% 0.2% 0.0% 0.2% 0.0%
FLORIDA 3.5% 3.3% 2.6% 2.3% 2.0%
*Source: 2009-10 Florida Department of Education (FL DOE) cohort graduation data as of 11/02/10.
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Appendix A
Frequently Asked Questions about Floridas Cohort Graduation Rates
What is a cohort?
For graduation purposes, a cohort is a group of students who enter the ninth grade at the same time on the sameschedule to graduate four years later.
How is the cohort graduation rate calculated?
The graduation rate is the number of graduates (numerator) divided by the total number of students in the adjustedcohort (denominator).
The denominator (adjusted cohort) is attained by compiling and classifying four years of individual student recordsto determine which students entered ninth grade for the first time four years prior to the year of the rate calculation;which students transferred into the cohort in ninth grade in year one, tenth grade in year two, eleventh grade in yearthree, and twelfth grade in year four; and which students from the group transferred out or became deceased.
The numerator is the number of graduates from the adjusted cohort.
Are graduation rates disaggregated by student subgroups?
The NGA, NCLB, and Florida rates are disaggregated by race. The NCLB rate has also been disaggregated byadditional subgroups, including gender, disabled, English Language Learners, economically disadvantaged
(students eligible for free/reduced-price lunch), and migrant students. Beginning with the 2008-09 cohort, all threerates will be disaggregated by the additional subgroups.
What are the advantages to using a cohort graduation rate method?
The cohort method allows adjustment for students mobility, thus providing a more accurate picture of the studentsprogress and outcomes.
How are students appropriately assigned to a cohort?
Students are assigned to a cohort based upon their initial entry into ninth grade. Incoming students are included inthe cohort for which they were originally scheduled to graduate. For example, students transferred into the cohort inninth grade in year one, tenth grade in year two, eleventh grade in year three, and twelfth grade in year four.
How are students appropriately removed from a cohort?
Currently students transferring to another public or private school, a home education program, or an adult educationprogram, in addition to deceased students are removed from the cohort.
Where can I find a complete list of the withdrawal and diploma codes used in Florida?
Appendices A and B in the Database Manuals for the Automated Student Database System, online ahttp://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/default.asp, provide all the withdrawal and diploma codes.
If a dropout re-enrolls in another high school, how is this student counted in the four-year graduation rate?
For graduation rate purposes, a prior dropout should be updated to a transfer if the student is later found enrolled inanother school. Keep in mind, the goal of the cohort graduation rate is to determine the final educational outcomefor all students during the four-year window.
How are students who are retained handled?
The student remains in the same cohort no matter how many times they are retained.
What happens if a student who was retained in ninth grade in year one of the cohort transfers to another schooin year two of the cohort?
This student remains in the original cohort. He does not start over in another cohort. The graduation rate is basedupon the students initial entry into ninth grade; it is not based upon their initial entry into ninth grade at a particularschool. An accurate graduation rate reflects the final outcome of all students four years after their initial entry into
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ninth grade. Cohort-based graduation rates are accurate only if each student is assigned to a single cohort. TheUSEDs Non-Regulatory Guidance paper for NCLB addresses this issue:
If a student who has repeated a grade transfers into a school, the student should be assigned to thecohort in which the student started 9th grade for the first time. This assignment prevents the studentfrom being included in two separate cohorts of 9th gradersthe cohort in which the student originallystarted 9th grade and the cohort in which the student was assigned in the school to which he or shetransferred. Unless the student skipped a grade later in high school or caught up with the originalcohort in some other manner, that student could not graduate within four years of starting 9th grade.1
How are students who graduated early, such as those who graduate with the 18 hour diploma, counted?
Students who graduate early are still counted in the cohort for which they were originally assigned. Remember,when calculating the cohort rate we are looking back four years prior. If a student enters ninth grade in 2005-06 andgraduates in 2007-08, this student would not be counted as a graduate until 2008-09.
What about students who take longer than four years to graduate?
Students taking longer than four years to graduate would be considered non-graduates in the four-year cohortgraduation rate.
Are summer graduates included in the graduation rate?
Yes, summer graduates are counted if they graduate by the end of the current school year.
If a student gets a certificate of completion at the end of the year but takes a course in summer school to earn therequired 2.0 GPA, does he count in the graduation rate if he attains the GPA before June 30?
Yes, if the student is reported with an applicable diploma type on the Student End of Year Status records submittedto the DOE for that school year. If the student is not reported with a diploma on the end-of-year records for thatyear, the student will not be counted as a graduate.
Does the student who earns a certificate of completion but has not passed the FCAT count as a graduate if hetakes the ACT in June and gets the concordant score before June 30?
The student will count if he is awarded a diploma by the district and it is reported with a diploma code on the end-of-year record for the applicable school year.
The DOE will identify graduates for the graduation rate based on the diploma type reported for students on theStudent End of Year Status record format. Survey 5 data collected on end-of-year records covers students whowere enrolled at any time during the 180-day school year, as well as during the school years associated summersession, as reported by the districts. A student who is not reported with a diploma type on end-of-year recordswould not be counted as a graduate. A students status is determined by the most recently reported withdrawacode, certificate type, or diploma type on the end-of-year records.
Does a student who leaves a regular high school and transfers to an adult high school and earns an adultdiploma count in the graduation rate?
A student would not count as a graduate in the graduation rate for the regular high school if his/her most recentlyreported end-of-year data indicated that he/she transferred out of the regular high school as a withdrawal to attendadult education (database code W26). Students who are reported as having received a regular high school diplomathrough an adult program (database code W43 or W52) are counted as graduates.
Why does Florida calculate more than one graduation rate?Florida currently calculates three graduation rates: Floridas NGA rate, detailed above, was mandated by the FloridaLegislature in 2006 to meet an agreement with the National Governors Association Compact and was firsimplemented using the data for 2004-05 and reported in the 2005-06 NCLB School Public Accountability Reports(SPARs); a rate for No Child Left Behind (NCLB) reporting purposes, implemented in 2001; and Floridas regularrate, which has been calculated consistently since 1998-99.
All three versions use the cohort method of tracking individual students in and out of the system from their entranceinto the ninth grade through completion four years later. However, each rate defines a graduate differently. Thedifferences between the NGA rate, the NCLB rate, and the regular graduation rate are as follows:
1NCLB High School Graduation Rate, Non-Regulatory Guidance, December 2008.
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The NGA graduation rate includes standard and special diplomas but excludes all GEDs.
The NCLB graduation rate includes standard diplomas and GEDs awarded to high schoolstudents but excludes the special diplomas and the GEDs awarded to adult students.
Floridas regular rate includes all diploma recipients. This includes standard and special diplomasand all GEDs.
Which graduation rate will be used in the school grades calculation?
For years 2009-10 and 2010-11, the department will use the National Governors Association (NGA) graduation ratein the high school grading formula. If federal requirements for the uniform rate change in the interim, Floridasfederal uniform rate will be adjusted accordingly. The Bureau of Evaluation and Reporting should be contacted [email protected] for more specific information.
Is the NGA rate the same as the federal uniform graduation rate?
No. The NGA graduation rate counts standard and special diplomas as graduates, whereas the federal graduationrate counts only standard diplomas. Both calculations count GEDs as non-graduates.
Why was the NGA rate selected for school grades purposes?
The NGA rate more closely resembles the federal uniform graduation rate in that neither calculation counts GEDsas graduates.
What is the federal uniform graduation rate?
As defined in 34 C.F.R. 200.19(b)(1)(i)-(iv), the four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate (hereafter referred to asthe four-year graduation rate) is the number of students who graduate in four years with a regular high schooldiploma divided by the number of students who form the adjusted cohort for the graduating class. From thebeginning of 9th grade, students who are entering that grade for the first time form a cohort that is subsequentlyadjusted by adding any students who transfer into the cohort later during the 9th grade and the next three yearsand subtracting any students who transfer out, emigrate to another country, or die during that same period.
Florida already has the tracking system in place to calculate the cohort graduation rate. However, Florida mustadjust its list of applicable graduates and transfers in order to fully comply with the new rules as set forth in Section200.19(b)(1)(ii)(B)(1).
Federal guidelines stipulate that only standard diplomas are counted as graduates and that only students who
transfer to another school or educational program that culminates with a standard diploma can be removed from thecohort.
Which students are currently removed from the cohort?
Transfers to other public schools, private schools, home education programs, or adult educational programs arecurrently considered as transfers and removed from the cohort.
Why cant the graduation rate and the dropout rate be added together to get 100%?
The rates apply to different periods of measurement
Graduation rate is a four-year, cohort-based indicator.
Dropout rate is a single-year indicator.
The rates apply to different populations
Graduation rate tracks the progress of a group of students who entered the same grade at the same timeover a four-year period.
Dropout rate tracks allninth- through twelfth-grade students in a single year.
Not all non-graduates in the cohort are dropouts. Some students have been retained and are still in school, andsome students received certificates of completion. These completers are considered non-graduates, not dropouts.
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Appendix BGraduation Rate Models for Floridas Next Generation High School Grading
Overview
For years 2009-10 and 2010-11, the department will use the National Governors Association (NGA) graduation rate in thehigh school grading formula. NGA graduation rates are currently published in the NCLB School Public AccountabilityReports (http://doeweb-prd.doe.state.fl.us/eds/nclbspar/index.cfm) under the heading Graduation rate with GED based
diploma recipients counted as non-graduates. The reporting of the NGA rate was implemented, in part, to addressrequirements of s. 1001.42(18)(e), F.S., which requires that annual public reports include graduation rates calculatedwithout GED tests. The NGA rate has also been used as a preliminary model for the USEDs more rigorous uniform fouryear adjusted cohort graduation rate, which will be required as part of AYP reporting beginning in 2011-12. Thedepartment plans to replace the NGA graduation rate with the federal uniform graduation rate for high school gradingbeginning with school year 2011-12. If federal requirements for the uniform rate change in the interim, Floridas federauniform rate will be adjusted accordingly.
Graduation Rate Model Comparisons
Both the NGA and federal uniform graduation rates are four-year adjusted cohort rate models. This means that thedenominator consists of all students entering grade nine for the first time four years prior to the year for which the rate iscalculated, plus incoming transfers (including incoming ninth graders in the first year of the cohort, tenth graders in thesecond year of the cohort, eleventh graders in the third year of the cohort and twelfth graders in the fourth [final] year of
the cohort) minus adjustments to the cohort (exiting transfers and deceased students).All high school students are included in the denominator unless they have been removed from the cohort as an exitingtransfer or deceased student. All students from the denominator who are not specifically classified as on-time graduatesbecome non-graduates including dropouts and other students who remain enrolled at the end of year four but have notyet graduated with a qualifying diploma, as well as certificate recipients and recipients of non-qualifying diploma types.
DENOMINATOR (Adjusted Cohort)Cohort Adjustments
(Students Removed from theDenominator)
Graduates(On-Time Graduates
from the Denominator)
Non-Graduates(All Non-Grads Remaining in
the Denominator)
NGA Rate
(To be used forschool years2009-10 and2010-11.)
Transfers to: Other public high schools
(including DJJs) or private high
schools; Home-education programs;
Adult-education programs *; and
Deceased students.
*Adult-Ed GED diploma recipients are alsoclassified as adult-education transfers for theNGA rate and are removed from the cohort.
Standard diplomarecipients.
Special diplomarecipients.
Dropouts,
Certificate recipients,
HS Exit Option GED*
diploma recipients, Continuing enrollees who
are not on-time graduates.
* Adult-Ed GED diploma recipients areclassified as adult-education transfersand removed from the cohort (they arenot non-grads here).
FederalUniformRate
(To be used forschool years2011-12 and
beyond.)
Transfers to:Other public or private high
schools (not includingDJJs);
Home-education programs; and
Deceased students.
Standard diplomarecipients.
Dropouts,
Certificate recipients,
GED diploma recipients,
Special diploma recipients,
Continuing enrollees whoare not on-time graduates,
Transfers to adult
education programs or DJJcenters who are notstandard diplomarecipients.
See Appendix D for information on which DOE database diploma codes count as graduates.
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Appendix C
Florida DOE Database Diploma Codes:Grad/Non-Grad Classification in Graduation Rate for High School Grading
NGA Graduation Rate (for 2009-10 and 2010-11):
Diploma Graduates Diploma Non-Graduates Diploma - Other
Standard Diplomas:
W06 standard diploma
W6A accelerated college prep option (18 hrs.)W6B accelerated career prep option (18 hrs.)WFA accelerated college prep, alt assessment in
lieu of FCAT (18 hrs.)WFB accelerated career prep, alt assessment in
lieu of FCAT (18 hrs.)WFT standard diploma, alt assessment in lieu of
FCATWFW standard diploma for SWD with FCAT
waiverW43 A standard high school diploma awarded
through an adult education program (fullcredit hrs.; passing FCAT)
W52 A standard high school diploma awardedthrough an adult education program (fullcredit hrs.; alt. assessment in lieu of FCAT)
Special Diplomas:W07 special diploma, option 1 for SWDsW27 special diploma, option 2 for SWDs
HS Exit Option GEDs:
WGA High school equivalency diploma
awarded to exit option students who passedthe GED and used an alt. assessment in lieu ofFCAT
WGD High school State of Florida diplomaawarded to exit option students who passedthe GED but not the FCAT
W10 High school equivalency diplomaawarded to exit option students who passedthe GED and the FCAT
Adult EducationGED:W45 Adult education
program GED diploma
(Treated the same as atransfer to an adulteducation program;removed from the cohort;removed from both thenumerator and thedenominator.)
Federal Uniform Rate* (for 2011-12 and beyond):
Diploma Graduates Diploma Non-Graduates
Standard Diplomas:
W06 standard diplomaW6A accelerated college prep option (18 hrs.)W6B accelerated career prep option (18 hrs.)WFA accelerated college prep, alt assessment in
lieu of FCAT (18 hrs.)
WFB accelerated career prep, alt assessment inlieu of FCAT (18 hrs.)
WFT standard diploma, alt assessment in lieu ofFCAT
WFW standard diploma for SWD with FCATwaiver
W43 A standard high school diploma awardedthrough an adult education program (fullcredit hours; passing FCAT)
W52 A standard high school diploma awardedthrough an adult education program (fullcredit hrs.; alt. assessment in lieu of FCAT)
All GED Diplomas:
WGA High school equivalency diplomaawarded to exit option students who passedthe GED and used an alt. assessment in lieu ofFCAT
WGD High school State of Florida diploma
awarded to exit option students who passedthe GED but not the FCAT
W10 High school equivalency diplomaawarded to exit option students who passedthe GED and the FCAT
W45 Adult education program GED diploma
Special Diplomas:
W07 special diploma, option 1 for SWDsW27 special diploma, option 2 for SWDs
* If the U.S. Department of Education changes requirements for the federal uniform rate between now and 2011-12Floridas federal uniform rate model will be adjusted accordingly.
Sources
Florida Department of Education 2009-10 Database Manuals:
Appendix A Attendance Recordkeeping Required Codes for Grade PK-12 Students
(URL: http://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appenda.pdf).
Appendix B Attendance Recordkeeping Required Codes for Adult Students
(URL: http://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appendb.pdf).
http://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appenda.pdfhttp://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appenda.pdfhttp://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appendb.pdfhttp://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appenda.pdfhttp://www.fldoe.org/eias/dataweb/database_0910/appendb.pdf